Wednesday, May 9, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY-MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three' Lebanon's president acts to end strife, begins talks Bombing, ends with vesef ire BEIRUT, Lebanon F ] itPresident Sulei- ran Franjich ord red an immediate cease- fire last night and announced talks aimed at nfm rcing an cid to the bloody fighting between gas eranment troops and Pales- tinian guerrilla "Peace has d-eslded on lebanon," kin offiiat ga ra "Int stalement said. Previ ms ceas fire effirts were frustrated when fresh ighting broke ott Mtonday night btw'n the Is't sides THE GOVE l\DhENT tas sotght to con- trol gterrillo perati os in Lebonots, while the Palestinians had sought the freedom to act independently against Israel. Franjeih canceled air strikes that had pounded glterrilla positions throughout the day after the outbreak of fighting Monday. The president acted after meeting with Arab mediators and envoys seeking to end the conflict. THE FIGHTING this week and list grew from mounting tensions between guerrillas and Lebanese following an Israeli attack on guerrilla bases and the assassination of guerrilla leaders in Beirut last month. Because of the strife in Lebanon, neigh- boring Syria closed its border with the half-Moslem, half-Christian nation, and warned it might intervene to support the guerrillas. The border closing was announced by Damascus Radio, which broadcast a gov- ernment statement accusing Lebanese authorities of carrying out a plot to finish off the guerrilla movement. IT APPEALED to the Lebanese people and Palestinian resistance "to close ranks and stand fast against Lebanese authori- ties implementing an external plot" and said Syria would provide support. But Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul Halim Khaddam, who was here Monday as part of Arab efforts to mediate the crisis, assured Lebanese authorities there would be no .intervention, official sources said. The Libyan news agency announced, meanwhile, that Libyan President Moam- mar Khadafi sent a cable to Al Fatah chief Yasir Arafat placing "all the resources of his country at the disposal of the Pales- tine resistance movement, leaving it up to you to make the arrangements." AP Photo TOURISTS SUNBATHE on a Beirut rooftop yesterday during a 24-hour curfew. Later, Lebanese President Suleiman Franjieh ordered an immediate cease-fire to end the fighting between army troops and Palestinian guerrillas. DUMPING CHARGED: Stinl(. rises around m- Ah, Spring Spring brings with it the sound of birds, impromptu concerts on the Diag, the sweet smell of marijuana smoke wafting - By GORDON ATCHESON released without being treated since Jan- its way among the ivy-covered structures A dramatic controversy has arisen over nary," Mammel said. He refused to com- of higher learning, and oh yes, a tuition the effectiveness of the city's waste treat- ment on the possibility raw sewage could increase courtesy of the Regents. They ment system following charges that city be dumped without his knowledge. voted last' month to tentatively increase sanitation engineers dumped raw sewage Assistant City Administrator P a t r i c k tuition by approximately six per cent, de- into the Huron River on a number of Kenney said his department nas "no in- pendent on the amount of state and federal occasions. formation" which would lead him to be- aid that is finally received. The increase The Department of Public Works ad- lieve the treatment system is overcapacity could also be affected by expected court mitted untreated sewage was released into to the extent indicated by McCormick. rulings on whether out-of-state students the river on at least four occasions last From all indications, however, the pres- can be charged higher tuition. year. ent treatment system must be expanded to d k t- On, and on .nd. .. That interminable Student Government Council election isn't over yet. The re- sults from the latest round of balloting, held during pre-registration, are expect- ed to be in sometime tonight or maybe tomorrow. But it could be that the re- turns won't be known until the week- end. Meanwhile, the campus waits with breathless anticipation. Happenings . ..4 . . . include a fairly light scheduie of events this first day of classes . . , At the Union Gallery, a seven day exhibit of Vietnamese art opens at 7:0 p.m. The showing is sponsored by the Ann Arbor Medical Aid for Indochina committee. Project Outreach is holding a mass meet- ing at 7:30 p.m. in Angell Hall, Aud. B. The session is for people interested in getting involved. Finally; the Grad Coffee Hour will be held at Rackham at 8 p.m. 4A2s weather lie sun just might decide to come out from behind the clouds today as students return to classes. With a 21 per cent chance of precipitation, high tempera- tures will be between 64 and 68 and lows, 45-50 DPW SUPERINTENDENT Fred Mam- handle mel claimed the ineidents "did not con- age. stitute a serious problem." No raw sewage has been released since January 1, ac- cording to Mammel. But Councilman John McCormick (R- Fifth Ward) said he has been told un- treated waste was dumped into the river as recentiy as Friday and that the sewage treatment system is operating at twice its capacity. McCormick refused to name his source. "I'M NOT AWARE of any sewage being .I the city's present quantity of sew- See WASTE, Page 11 Student stabbed at Tappan school By DAN BIDDLE A ninth grade student was stabbed several times in the chest during an after- noon incident at T a p p a n Junior High School yesterday, school officials reported. The injured student, tenatively identified as Jim Denton of Ann Arbor, was taken to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital for surgery on stab wounds which one witness described as "right below the heart." According to several students, the inci- dent began when three Pioneer High School students harassed Denton during-= See BOY, Page 11 Lebano meati Egypt from t tinianj In C similar warned cern" Lebano in M once a, ments comes' tentiall tions. IN ,A sein's from J r *« Lebanon: Unreststrife bridgeaseveral ecades By PIL NEWSOM army moved against the guerrillas who UPI Foreign News Analyt had made Lebanon their new base. ULY, 1958, U.S. forces landed in T o u g h Lebanese President Suleiman n to help put down an anti-govern- Franjieh declared Lebanon would not be- uprising supported by Syria and come the base for a guerrilla "occupation and stemming at least in part army" and he added: he presence in Lebanon of Pales- "I don't believe that any other Arab refugees. country has given our Palestinian brothers ctober, 1969, in the midst of a what we have given them." crisis, the U.S. State Department I it would. view "with greatest con- IT WAS TRUE that in Lebanon the any threat to the integrity of guerrillas had enjoyed the most freedom n. and the best communications with areas ay; 1973, the Lebanese government outside the Arab world to be found any. gain finds itself threatened by ele- where in the Middle East. from the outside, and again be- Half Christian and half Moslem Labanon the focal point in a crisis with po- enjoys, in a parliamentary sense, the only y g r a v e international complica- working democracy in the Middle East. She prefers to remain the area's banker and center of tourism. LN ACTION similar to King Hus- Lebanon has supported the Palestinian ouster of Palestinian guerrillas cause, but did little to fight Israel in 1948 ordan in 1970, the small Lebanese See LEBANON, Page 8